Faith World
 
 
Luther rehabilitated? Catholics and Protestants disagree
Sep 24, 2011


 
Among Catholic-Protestant splits on display during Pope Benedict’s visit to 
 Germany is a disagreement over whether Martin Luther, the 16th century 
reformer  who launched the split in western Christianity, has now been 
rehabilitated. 
Pope Leo X cast Luther out of the Roman Catholic Church in 1521 with a  
vociferous decree branding him “the slave of a depraved mind” and calling his  
followers a “pernicious and heretical sect.” But his present-day 
successor,  Benedict, spoke so positively of Luther’s deep faith during a visit 
to 
the  monk’s old monastery in Erfurt on Friday that Germany’s top Protestant 
bishop  announced Luther had effectively been rehabilitated. 
“Luther has experienced a de facto rehabilitation today through this  
appreciation of his work,” Bishop Nikolaus Schneider, head of the Evangelical  
Church in Germany (EKD), announced to journalists on Friday after talks with  
Benedict. “We heard this very clearly from the mouth of the pope,” he said. 
 “What follows now formally is another question … but that’s not so 
important for  me.” 
Vatican spokesman Rev Federico Lombardi begged to differ on Saturday. “To 
say  that would be exaggerated,” he told journalists in Freiburg, the last 
stop on  the pope’s four-day tour of his homeland. “What this is about is 
having deep  faith and I think it emphasises the commonalities we have in our 
love of  faith.” 
What happened 490 years ago is taking on new significance in Germany 
because  Protestants here are preparing to celebrate the 500th anniversary of 
Luther’s 95  Theses of 1517, the manifesto of dissent that eventually led to 
the 
Reformation.  The Protestants would like Catholics to say Luther was not a 
heretic but a major  Christian theologian. “It would be nice if they could 
declare him a doctor of  the Church,” Erfurt’s Lutheran Bishop Ilse 
Junkermann told Reuters. 
A German, Benedict is the first pope who has read Luther, knows Lutherans  
well and appreciates what he sees as his positive aspects — his deep faith, 
his  focus on Jesus, his emphasis on the Bible and his mastery of the German 
 language. As Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the pope also played a key role in 
a  1999 Catholic-Lutheran accord saying they no longer disagreed on some 
complex  theological issues Luther raised and lifting anathemas 
(denunciations) the two  sides hurled at each other back then. 
Schneider said some give and take would be needed on both sides to come to 
an  agreement by 2017. For example, he said his church would not present 
Luther as  “an untouchable hero who never did anything wrong.” It is not clear 
whether the  Vatican, which does not like to officially undo the work of a 
previous pope, can  or will go as far as actually rehabilitating Luther. 
Some Lutherans bristle at the very idea of rehabilitation, saying they don’
t  need a Vatican stamp of approval. 
Vatican officials have suggested in the past that no official 
rehabilitation  was needed because the ban expired at Luther’s death.  “One 
cannot do  
anything for Martin Luther now because Martin Luther, wherever he is, is not  
worried about these condemnations,” Cardinal Edward Cassidy, then the 
Vatican’s  top ecumenical official, said in 1999. 
Schneider said he had not yet invited the pope to join the 2017  
commemorations. “I have not reached that point, but I invited (Benedict) to 
take  a 
different view of our celebration as one of the power of the Gospel and the  
theology of God,” he said.

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